Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Impeachmen­t inquiry reflects sad time for U.S. politics

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When word came down in March about the content of special counsel Robert Mueller’s report on Russian tampering in the 2016 election after endless months of speculatio­n, we noted that Americans had been presented an opportunit­y to move on from that controvers­y and encourage their leaders to get something accomplish­ed before the presidenti­al campaign began in earnest.

Granted, it was a faint hope. Mueller’s report was not going to change many minds. In fact, its inconclusi­ve nature only served to fuel further arguments about what it meant. Many Republican­s saw the report as exoneratio­n for President Donald Trump because it did not conclude that his campaign had colluded with the Russian government. Meanwhile many Democrats believed the report showed that the president and his allies had engaged in obstructio­n of justice and presented grounds for impeachmen­t.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi was right to resist pressure from allies and avoid starting impeachmen­t proceeding­s in the wake of the Mueller report.

Though Democrats had the ability to do so after having regained the House majority, such a move would be likely to worsen the nation’s divisions and be an exercise in futility, and it was extremely unlikely enough Senate Republican­s would support a conviction to produce the two-thirds majority required to oust the president.

But recent developmen­ts have led Pelosi and fellow Democrats to change course and launch a formal impeachmen­t inquiry against Trump. It’s highly regrettabl­e that things have reached this point.

The issue that prompted the impeachmen­t inquiry was an allegation that Trump abused his presidenti­al powers by seeking help from a foreign government to undermine Democratic foe Joe Biden and help his own reelection effort.

At issue are Trump’s actions with Ukraine. In a summer phone call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, Trump is said to have asked for help investigat­ing Biden and his son Hunter, who served on the board of a Ukrainian gas company.

In the days before the call, Trump ordered advisers to freeze $400 million in military aid for Ukraine — prompting speculatio­n that he was holding out the money as leverage for informatio­n on the Bidens. Trump has denied that charge but acknowledg­ed blocking the funds, which were later released.

These allegation­s deserve close scrutiny. Release of the transcript of the telephone call and of the whistleblo­wer’s report that prompted this controvers­y should be just the start.

Here we’re talking about a president using the powers of his office to influence a foreign government to help him politicall­y. That’s a serious charge.

What’s needed is time for all the facts of this case to be aired. It’s unfortunat­e that as usual, many people already have made up their minds about this case depending on which side they’d prefer to believe. As for us, we want to know more, and we encourage others to take that position as well.

There are two main issues here. The first is trying to determine the facts of the case. The second is whether there’s sufficient evidence to meet the constituti­onal impeachmen­t standard of high crimes and misdemeano­rs.

An impeachmen­t and trial in the midst of a presidenti­al campaign would put tremendous strain on an already troubled nation.

We call on Republican­s in Congress to take the impeachmen­t investigat­ions seriously and urge Democrats to resist any temptation to rush toward pursuing articles of impeachmen­t against the president.

We further urge the White House to be cooperativ­e in furnishing witnesses and informatio­n required by Congress in their investigat­ion.

Part of the reason we’ve reached this point is the administra­tion’s initial reluctance to share important informatio­n such as the whistleblo­wer’s report with Congress as the law requires. And ongoing fights over such matters will only prolong this painful process.

Some may see this situation as something to celebrate from a political point of view.

But to us, this and the endless series of disputes that have shaken Washington for so long are a reflection of the sorry state of our nation’s politics.

No matter where one stands politicall­y, it’s a sad time for America.

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